dealing w/the fixit floppy.
Also added the MNT_RELOAD, MNT_WANTRDWR, MNT_ASYNC, MNT_NOATIME,
MOUNT_UNION flags. Someone might want to check my description of MNT_RELOAD.
2.2-R candidate. Not a 2.1.6-R candidate -- some current flags aren't in
2.1.5-R's version.
for NULL RPC client handles. This should hopefully fix the problems
Satoshi reported on -current.
- Add socket descriptor sanity checks to _yp_unbind().
- Fix yp_order() so that it handles the RPC_PROCUNAVAIL error gracefully.
NIS+ in YP compat mode doesn't support the YPPROC_ORDER procedure.
This is a 2.2 candidate with bells on.
inside libc. Add collate_range_cmp as alias to __collate_range_cmp
for temp. backward compatibility.
collate_range_cmp will be replaced with direct code for each
external program for compatibility with the rest of world
1) Rename FNM_ICASE to FNM_CASEFOLD
2) Add FNM_LEADING_DIR
Add proper (unsigned char) casts to tolower().
Use 'char' function argument for proper sign extension
Add progname to warning/error message layout. (joerg)
Remove inline assembler, no speed impact, not need for the obfuscation (bde)
Remove on the fly calculation of parameters, no longer critical.
Make D & U flags valid even if we don't support them.
Don't call imalloc until we're done initializing.
Zap contents on free() if we have "Junk" set. [*]
Various nitpicking.
[*] As a sideeffect of this change, if you are worried about
sensitive data lingering in memory, you can use the 'Junk' option
now to make sure phkmalloc zaps memory when it is returned. add
char * malloc_options = "J";
to your source. Obviously there is a performance impact.
Somehow, I also managed to get quite some other changes in this file at
the same time. All I did was checkout the file and made a single change.
If someone has an explanation how these PURIFFY defines got in...
- removed references to nonexistent pathconf-related variables.
- document everything in CTL_MACHDEP(more than in sysctl.8) and
80% of the things in CTL_KERN (same as in sysctl.8).
Various neat features added. More documentation in the manpage.
If your machine has very little RAM, I guess that would be < 16M
these days :-(, you may want to try this:
ln -fs 'H<' /etc/malloc.conf
check the manpage.
as done after a quasi-recursive call to free() had modified what we
thought we knew about the last chunk of pages.
This bug manifested itself when I did a "make obj" from src/usr.sbin/lpr,
then make would coredump in the lpd directory.